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Welcome to the new GoLVPOA.com website for the Lake Vista Property Owners Association, New Orleans LA. Forgive our still-in-progress product. Please check out our new features including an ability to update your Profile online, your Pet Directory and EASY PAYMENT OF 2019 DUES!

A neighborhood meeting to discuss a variance request and more specifically, a variance for the rear yard setback along Wren Street for the condos that are planned for 106 Wren Street. More details here.

Members can add their spouses and children by creating Level 2 and 3 members going to Login > My Profile > "You may ADD an additional 10 level 2 members" or "You may ADD an additional level 3 members."

This is a pretty hidden location for doing this but not hard at all once you know where to find it.

Our Communities

While Lakeshore and Lake Vista are among New Orleans' newer neighborhoods, the area includes the 18th century Old Spanish Fort, whose origins predate the official founding of the city.

The circa 1939 Lake Vista neighborhood is a fine example of the Garden City movement, and is much beloved by its residents for its superblock design devoid of thru-streets and possessing separate, non-intersecting vehicular and pedestrian networks.

Lakeshore and Lake Vista lie on land reclaimed from the shallows of Lake Pontchartrain in the early 20th century. Soil was dredged from the lake and a seawall constructed in a project started by the Orleans Levee Board in the 1920s and continued by the Works Progress Administration during the Great Depression. Most of the buildings in this predominantly residential district were not built until after World War II.

After Hurricane Katrina in 2005, while some homes and businesses flooded (especially those on and near Robert E. Lee Boulevard) the majority of the section - like the majority of the Lakefront - escaped the disastrous post-Katrina flooding of New Orleans, by virtue of the higher elevation of this man-made land. Post-Katrina, the Lakefront appeared as a slender, curiously undamaged and almost wholly recovered zone adjacent to the far lower-lying and hard-hit Lakeview and Gentilly neighborhoods on the other side of Robert E. Lee Boulevard.